Friends of the Somme - Mid Ulster Branch  
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Date Information
01/05/2020 02218
16/06/2018 ‘That we, the members of the above lodge, learn with deep regret of the sad news announcing the death of Private David McMenemy, of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, on the battlefield of France, and we desire to convey our sincere sympathy to the parents and relatives of our worthy brother. As a member of the lodge, and an Ulster Volunteer,, we deeply mourn his loss.’
16/06/2018 At a special meeting of Tullyhogue L.O.L. on Monday evening – Bro. R Mullan in the chair, and (in the absence of the D.M., Bro. E Hall) Bro. John Mallon in the vice-chair – the secretary (Mr Jim Davison) was instructed to forward the following resolution to the relatives of the late Bro. D McMenemy:-
16/06/2018
16/06/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 28th November 1914: Orange News
04/06/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 21st November 1914:
04/06/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 21st November 1914: Private David McMenemy
04/06/2018 Private David McMenemy, third son of Mr Samuel McMenemy, Tullyhogue, was killed in action on the battlefield 21st October. The young soldier was only 21 years of age, and had joined the Special Reserve of the Royal Inniskillings Fusiliers in January last. He was called up on the outbreak of war, and went to the front with the first draught. Great sympathy is felt for the bereaved parents and friends. The father of the fallen soldier spent twenty years in the British Army, and three other sons are at present with the colours – Private John McMenemy, who is in Ebrington Barracks, Derry and Privates Robert and Samuel McMenemy, both in the Ulster Volunteer party at Finner Camp. The deceased, who was a member of L.O.L. No 111, was very popular in the district, and his death is deeply regretted by all who knew him.
04/06/2018
04/06/2018 McMENEMY – 21st October. Killed in action at the front. Private Davis McMenemy, of the Royal Inniskillings Fusiliers, third son of Samuel McMenemy, Tullyhogue.
04/06/2018
28/03/2018 Three of David’s brothers – John McMenemy, Robert McMenemy and Samuel McMenemy, also served during the First World War. John had been wounded in action at Gallipoli and again at the Somme. Robert and Samuel had both been gassed but recovered.
28/03/2018 Family: Samuel McMenemy, Margaret Ann McMenemy, John McMenemy (born 13th June 1888?), Samuel McMenemy (born 8th January 1890), Margaret McMenemy (born about 1892), David McMenemy (born 20th August 1893), Robert McMenemy (born 12th January 1895), Mary Jane McMenemy (born 15th May 1896), Alexander McMenemy (born about 1898), Martha McMenemy (born about 1901), Joseph McMenemy (born 21st April 1900), Edward McMenemy (born 10th October 1902, died 1st May 1905, age 2), Charles McMenemy (born 12th June 1906).
28/03/2018 The CWGC record Private David McMenemy as the son of Samuel and M A McMenemy, of Tullyhogue, Dungannon, County Tyrone
28/03/2018
28/03/2018 David McMenemy was the third son of Samuel and Margaret Ann McMenemy. Samuel McMenemy and Margaret Ann Campbell were married on 7th May 1887 in the district of Cookstown.
28/03/2018 David was born on 20th August 1893 in Tullyhogue, Cookstown. He was one of at least eleven children, nine surviving.
28/03/2018 His father, Samuel, had previously spent twenty years serving in the British Army.
28/03/2018 The 1901 census records David as 7 years old. The family lived in Tullyhogue. His father Samuel was a farm servant. Both his elder brothers had left school and were working as linen weavers.
28/03/2018 The 1911 census records David as 17 years old, living with the family at Donaghrisk, Tullaghoge, County Tyrone. David was working as a farm servant.
28/03/2018 David McMenemy was regarded as a popular young man in the district and a valued member of L.O.L. 111.
28/03/2018 David McMenemy enlisted in Cookstown and joined the Royal Inniskillings Fusiliers Special Reserve in January 1914 and was called up on the outbreak of hostilities and sent to the Western Front with the first draft.
28/03/2018 Private David McMenemy was serving with the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers when he was killed in action on Wednesday 21st October 1914. He was 21 years old.
28/03/2018 Private David McMenemy has no known grave and is commemorated on panel 5 at Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium. He is also commemorated on Cookstown Cenotaph.
28/03/2018
28/03/2018
28/03/2018 On the 21st October 1914, the 2nd Battalion were involved in a very heavy German attack which drove them back about three hundred yards. The Battalion held their position from 5.15pm to after midnight when they were able to re-take their former trench.
30/12/2015 From the Tyrone Courier dated 26th November 1914:
30/12/2015 Private John McMenemy, whose wife is employed with Mr S R Kingston, D.I., R.I.C., Cookstown, is officially reported seriously wounded in the arm. His parents reside at Tullyhogue and were notified by the War Office on Wednesday that another brother, Samuel, is in hospital suffering from ‘gas drift.’ Still another of their sons, Robert, who was seriously gassed some months ago, is convalescent and serving in Tipperary, while a fourth member of this patriotic family, David, was killed in action twelve months ago. The previously mentioned, John, was previously wounded at the Dardanelles.
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated Saturday 15 July 1916: Private John McMenemy (brother of David McMenemy)
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 Private David McMenemy, third son of Mr Samuel McMenemy, Tullyhogue, was killed in action on 21st October 1914. the young soldier was only 21 years of age, and had joined the Special Reserve of the Royal Inniskillings Fusiliers in January last. He was called up on the outbreak of war, and went to the front with the first draft. Great sympathy is felt for the bereaved parents and friends.
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